Difference between revisions of "H.I.E. Dhlomo"
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− | [[H.I.E. Dhlomo]] (1903-1956) was a South African actor, writer, dramatist, director, animator, journalist and cultural theorist. | + | [[H.I.E. Dhlomo]] (1903-1956) was a South African actor, writer, dramatist, director, musician, composer, animator, journalist and cultural theorist. He is considered the 'father' of black South African drama. |
== Biography == | == Biography == | ||
− | Born Herbert Isaac Ezra Dhlomo at Siyamu, near Pietermaritzburg. | + | Born Herbert Isaac Ezra Dhlomo at Siyamu, near Pietermaritzburg in KwaZulu-Natal. He grew up in Johannesburg where his father worked. |
+ | After completing his teacher training, he taught for a while at Umzumbe on the KwaZulu-Natal South Coast before relocating to Johannesburg and become head teacher at the American Board Mission School in Doornfontein. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Dhlomo appears to have been influenced a good deal by his older brother, Rolfes Dhlomo, who also trained as a teacher and became a prolific writer. | ||
He became a journalist on ''[[Bantu World]]'' and ''[[Ilanga lase Natal]]''. Organiser of the Carnegie Library in Germiston. | He became a journalist on ''[[Bantu World]]'' and ''[[Ilanga lase Natal]]''. Organiser of the Carnegie Library in Germiston. | ||
In 1933 he founded the [[Bantu Dramatic Society]] in Johannesburg, serving as its vice-president for a period. | In 1933 he founded the [[Bantu Dramatic Society]] in Johannesburg, serving as its vice-president for a period. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Dhlomo died in Durban in 1956. | ||
In 1983 a group of artists, aware of the contribution made by Dhlomo, founded and named a theatre after him: The [[Dhlomo Theatre]] (situated a hundred yards from the [[Market Theatre]]). It opened on 21 March 1983 with ''[[Night of the Long Wake]]'' by [[Dukuza ka Macu]]. | In 1983 a group of artists, aware of the contribution made by Dhlomo, founded and named a theatre after him: The [[Dhlomo Theatre]] (situated a hundred yards from the [[Market Theatre]]). It opened on 21 March 1983 with ''[[Night of the Long Wake]]'' by [[Dukuza ka Macu]]. | ||
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=== Education === | === Education === | ||
− | + | Qualified as a teacher at Amanzimtoti Training Institute (Adams College) in KwaZulu-Natal (1922-1924). | |
==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance== | ==Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance== |
Revision as of 18:07, 12 October 2023
H.I.E. Dhlomo (1903-1956) was a South African actor, writer, dramatist, director, musician, composer, animator, journalist and cultural theorist. He is considered the 'father' of black South African drama.
Contents
Biography
Born Herbert Isaac Ezra Dhlomo at Siyamu, near Pietermaritzburg in KwaZulu-Natal. He grew up in Johannesburg where his father worked. After completing his teacher training, he taught for a while at Umzumbe on the KwaZulu-Natal South Coast before relocating to Johannesburg and become head teacher at the American Board Mission School in Doornfontein.
Dhlomo appears to have been influenced a good deal by his older brother, Rolfes Dhlomo, who also trained as a teacher and became a prolific writer.
He became a journalist on Bantu World and Ilanga lase Natal. Organiser of the Carnegie Library in Germiston.
In 1933 he founded the Bantu Dramatic Society in Johannesburg, serving as its vice-president for a period.
Dhlomo died in Durban in 1956.
In 1983 a group of artists, aware of the contribution made by Dhlomo, founded and named a theatre after him: The Dhlomo Theatre (situated a hundred yards from the Market Theatre). It opened on 21 March 1983 with Night of the Long Wake by Dukuza ka Macu.
His biography (The New African: A Study of the Life and Work of H.I.E. Dhlomo) was writtten by Tim Couzens and published in 1985. (See: Couzens, 1985, De Beer, 1995).
Education
Qualified as a teacher at Amanzimtoti Training Institute (Adams College) in KwaZulu-Natal (1922-1924).
Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance
Dhlomo as writer
Plays
Dhlomo wrote a number of plays, many of which allegorised black African history for his contemporaries. Only one play - Nonqause: The Girl who Killed to Save - was published in his lifetime (in 1936). It was also the first published English play by a black South African. The rest of the plays were published posthumously in 1985 as a collection entitled H.I.E. Dhlomo Collected Works. (Edited by Tim Couzens and Nick Visser)
Dhlomo wrote the following plays in English:
Historical plays:
Nonqause: The Girl who Killed to Save
Shaka (the text of this play is lost)
Urban plays:
Ruby and Frank (1939)
Play fragments:
Microform copies of a collection of fragments of plays by Dhlomo are held by the Institute for the Study of English in Africa at Rhodes University. These play fragments include:
Other works
He wrote a number of important articles on “African theatre” (see References).
He wrote a considerable body of dramatic theory & criticism.
The 1985 Collected Works includes collections of his poetry (including the autobiographical-political poem, Valley of a Thousand Hills, first published in 1941) and ten short stories(under the collective title When Evening Falls).
Dhlomo as actor and/or director
Directed his brother Rolfes’s “dramatic sketches” for the Emancipation Centenary Celebrations at the Bantu Men's Social Centre in 1934.
Awards, etc
Sources
Tim Couzens. 1985. The New African: A Study of the Life and Work of H.I.E. Dhlomo. Johannesburg: Ravan Press.
Visser and Couzens (eds). 1985. H.I.E. Dhlomo Collected Works. Johannesburg: Ravan Press.
Mona de Beer. 1995. Who Did What in South Africa. Johannesburg: Ad Donker.
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